Had never heard of the book, the author, or the publisher, but I picked this sweet little copy of short stories up for $1. The title, Sweet Land, and some of the story titles (various references to farming) suggested Weaver might write in the spirit of Wendell Berry, and I hoped this would prove true.
While Weaver's style is less polished than Berry's and his characters not always beneficiaries of equal grace, effective style and generous grace are not absent, and I have no doubt that Weaver's bookshelves have a section reserved for a number of Berry's books. Rural life, farm communities, and the changing culture of life in the northern plains are central topics in most of these stories.
The characters feel real, and it is their humanity that endears them to readers; their interactions with one another are by turns humorous and heartbreaking. Family loyalty, innocence, desire, nostalgia, and aging are a few of the themes Weaver explores.
Here are my favorite selections: Flax, Dispersal, A Gravestone Made of Wheat, Blaze of Glory, and Haircut.
The cover proclaims that this collection is "Now a Feature Film." Having never heard of the book or the movie prior to finding it on a clearance shelf, I confess I'm curious to see how this 2006 publication is depicted on film.